Imposing: V t. HEN the com3rnton9 of f?t. w Cecilia's cathedral, Fortieth and Burt streets, wag placed in position last Sunday, great things were evidenced for Omaha and the diOf?io of which, this cltjr la the seat of church Gov ernment. ''There, were In Jeruaah-m devout mon of every nation under heaven," said the pottle, and though Jerusalem -.vas a great religious centeT In ,lta day and a hrlne for Christians throufihout . Vtv) world, the big Catholic parade in Oraal a demonstrated that more nations are rep resented In Omaha now than wore in Jerusalem years ago when the apna- tle recorded that "devout mon of all na tions made their home In Jerusalem." Nations were fewer when Jcv-Ubalem was In Its glory and was tha "hoo city" of the Christian world. But the parmlo In Omaha demonstrated that the nations of the world will "bear the banners of the cross." Strange soldiers were many of tho pri vates In the ranks of the vast army that marched up the Farnjm street hill, r.s though to take a fortress by storm aiul return with victorious eagles. In tha throng were men from the north, wIktu gleams of the midnight sun may be seen as tbey worship In native binds, in mi from beneath the southern skies, whvre was born the religion which brought .toe army together In Omaha. Subjects of emperors, kings and presidents, whr-se national life and customs nro as JifTervnt as tha languages they spoke in their na tive - lands, Joined In tho great pageant which witnessed the laying of tho cor nerstone ,of St. Cecilia's, the cathcdi-il 'f Omaha. Dark-skinned Italians and laughing Servians addressed In Latin tongues, the natives of Ireland, Bcotlaid and England and expressed their pleasure over the event to those win understand rmly the . plainest of Anglo-Saxon. Mon marched side by side who had never een each other before and' will probably never meet again, unless It be In the grttat cathedral, when the bishop of Omaha an nounces that It Is ready for dedication. In numbers the men In the Catholic pa rade were equal to ten or twelve full reg lnnts of Infantry, exclush-e of the bands wuch led each division. There were more men in line than there are Catholic peo ple In the diocese of Cheyenne, South Caro Una, Alaska, Bait Lake City or Great Falls. Three times as many gathered In Omaha a week ago to march from the old cathedral to the new as there are In the diocese of Baker City or the state of North Carolina. Estimated In the most conservative num- American (Copyright. 1907. by Frank G. Carpenter.) UXOR, Oct, 13 (Special uorre- Ll spondence ot The ue.e.j All flay I long I have been wandering MWMb MIIVUB- ..... ... kings who ruled Egypt 3,000 or 4,000 years ago. I have gone V v. down lnto the subterranean chambers which the Pharaohs, who oppressed Jho Israelites dug out of the solid rocks for their burial vaults and have visited the tombs of other kings, even older than they. ,The last resting place of more than fifty of these monarchs of early Egypt have already been discovered, and the work la till going on. with new finds of historical value every year. Some of the beet excavating Is being done by Americans. This Is the caee al along the Ntle valley. While at Cairo I found the money of Harvard college and the Boston museum uncovering the ceme teries of the nabobs and paupers who were burled under the shadow of the great pyramids of glseh at the time of King Cheops. The Egyptian exploration fund, which Is supported by Great Britain, Can ada and the United States, has a small army operating nuar Luxor, and a large part of the valley in which these royal, tombs lie Is now In the hands of Theodore M. Davis, a wealthy American, who has his laborsa bitty all winter long, year after year, duffing up tho debris and looking Tor theso wonderful evidences pf Egypt's past. During my trip of today I met a young sreheoloKlst, who Is in charge of the Dav'. excavations, and It was he who ohowsd me through the tombmof the kings and explained symbols and pictures on the walla I went to that part of the val ley where the excavation la now going on and took pictures of a gang og 150 Egyp tian men and boys now working there. Valley of the Klugs. But first let me tell you something about the place which these ancient Egyptian monarchs selected for their burials. They wanted to hide their remains In such a way ( that posterity could never find them, and f to cover them so that future generations would not imagine . that they and their treasures lay beneath. Our cemeteries are chosen to" the beauty of their surround ings We like to turn our toe to the daisies and to have the green trees whtsoer a requiem over our heads. The old Egyptian kings wanted the dry. thirsty desert, anj they chose this region, about as far up the Nile valley as Cleveland Is Inland from the Atlantic and fully six miles back f-om the green strip on which their people lived. I can Imagine no place more dreary. At this point the Nile la walled on the west by thirsty limestone mountains. As far as tha waters reach the valley Is the greenest of green; but beyond them lies a desert as drear as any part of the Sahara. There Is not a blade of grass; not a sprig of vegeta tion of any kind. There Is nothing but sand and dry mountains, the latter almost as rarged as the wildest parts of the Rockies. Some of the stones are built up In great precipices. In other places there are fort Uke bluffs and other convulsions ot nature. To vUtlt this valley one first comes to p-sor, wblcb U just About on the lt Exercises I !Y-A hf - - W PKELATES AND DIGNITARIES ASSEMBLING ON THB PLATFORM. hers, alrnost one man for every Catholie family in Nebraska marched in the parade. Such a line of marching men was a surprlsa elike to the prelates who gathered to wit ness the ceremonies, the members of Cath olic organizations and laymen of the church. BeRldns the throng which marched In the parade, archbishops, bishops and priests re viewed the parade from a stand In the ca thedral, who represented 1,595.290 Catholics In the west and northwest. Among those who galhi-rod In Omaha were Uiree of the distinguished archbishops of the United Etatcs, Including Most Rev. John Ireland of Pt. Paul. Most Rev. John J. Keane of Du buque, and Most Rev. James Edward Qulg ley, archbishop of Chicago. Archbishop Christie of Oregon and Archbishop Glennon of St. Louis were unable to attend the cer emonies of the laying of the cornerstone, but Archbishop J. J. Glennon of St. Luula arrived luring the werk to spend some time as the guest of Bishop Richard Scan nell of Omaha. Among the bishops present were Right Rev. Lawrence Seanlan, bishop of Salt Lnke City, who was the choice of the priests) of the diocese of Omaha for bishop, but who was sent to Salt' Lake City when It waa dotermlned that neither the candidate of the archbishop ot St. Louis nor the candi date of the priests of northern Nebraska should pule over the great diocese of which Richard Pcannell. bishop of Concordia, wa appointed the heod. Bishop Seanlan went to Salt Lake City and has made the church there ruler of a Catholio population Of 10,000 and a territory of 153,000 squa. miles bus been placed under him. Other bishops present were Right. Itew. Philip J. Gurrlgan of Bioux City, vice rec tor of the Catholio university at Washing ton and now a bishop who leads in the west In the prohibition movement; Bishop Matz of Denver, Eluhop Burke of St. Joseph and Bishop Bonacum of Lincoln Mro among others who reviewed the , great parade In Omaha ond the laying of the cornerstone of St. Cecilia's church. Many of the bishops, who attended the ceremonies Sunday secured their territory from tho great vlcarate of Nebraska, over which ruled auch men as Father O'Gorman. ' Bishop Lenlhan ot Great. Falls,, formerly of Fort Dodge, la., was among the pre lates who stood beside - the bishop of Omaha when the cornerstone was laid. Others were Right Rev. James McGoldrtck of Duluth, Right Rev. John Shanley, bishop of Fargo; Right Rv. Joseph B. Cotter, bishop of Winona; .Right Rev. John Jannsen, bishop of Belleville; Right Rev. John Joseph Hennessy, bishop of Wichita; Archaeologists Digging Up of Old Thebes, the capital of Egypt In the days of Its most brilliant past. The city lay on both sides of the Nile, but Luxor la on the east bank, and I had to cross the river In a ferryboat and ride for an hour ot so through the desert before I came Into the valley of the kings. However, my donkey boy was a good one and his donkeys were young. His name ,wns Jereph, and the brute I bestrode was called "Gingerbread." Gingerbread had a slice of i'.cin about ss big as a dollar removed from his rump, and Joscpn pricked this spot from time to time to hurry him .onward. We crereed the green fields, winding our way In and out along the canals, imtll w came to the desert and entered a wl'.d .-rrge walled with rocks of yellow llmontouo and with a conglomerate mixture of P'nt and lime stone of curious formation. The gorge shows evidence of having beeti cut out by some mighty stream of the paL There are masses of debris along tha si les, and tha way Is rough except on the ro d which has been made by the explorers. Looking at the valley from :he Nile one would not suppose that It was anything other than a desert Gorge, ami It was not until X was right In It that I realised It was a cemetery. There are no gravestones or monuments, and the klngn obliterated every sign that might Indicate their burial places. They dug out great cuambers un der the bed of this 6led-up liver and ar ranged'eisterns for their proijer drainage, but when they hail finished th 'y loft every, thing as It was In nature; and for this reason their toirrhs remained for ages un touched and unknown. lai the Tomba. From time to time, however, one or an other was discovered by future genera tions. Btrabo, the Greek geographer, who was alive when Christ was bort , speaks of forty of them as being worthy of a visit, and othere are mentioned by writers later on. During our generation nost of them were again lost, and It vas not until some Arab grave robbers bgan to sell curious antiquities that It wa i found that the tomba had again been discovered and were being; rifled by thes vandals. The archeologists then went to woik, and their explorations have resulted n the . opening up of tomb after tomb, ur til wa now have what might be called i. sub terranean city of the dead here In the heart of the Libyan desert. The tombs are nothing like our burial vaults. They are large rooms cut c ut of the solid rock, with walls as straight and as smooth as those of a mason. They are reached by many slips, going down In clined planes until they bring you far below tho surface ot the valley and away down under the mountains. Each kin j had bis own to;nb. and he decorated It with sketches and paintings representing the life ot his time. The ceilings are bea uiful. From some ot them the figures of goes and goddusses look down upon you. (Khars are colored in geometric lines, and In some men and women are carved In bas-reliefs out of the solid rock aud then pointed. Many of the scenes are religious, and froro them the egyptcloglst la able to tell us what tt ptepl ot that ty believed, Thtj at Laying' Atl;-V- H p. nii"l i i i nil im i v i urn i mi. mi. .i i.mpii .ii n una ' ' " ' I . ..--..,.. . - r , - . ; ., i ' Y Y.;s -. " :;Y:.-. Y: " 1 :'; '. ;Y:i.Yi s . . j. , - '..., ' '" - . ... . . .. . . - 1 .'.-. ... "'' V . -j- - - - - - - y'Y , -. ' t x- , " (", if " ' i ' j .''. - ; " f . " ft h ' v;- , , -i. u 'L,. '...I i .s Right Rev. James O'Gorman, bishop of Bishop O'Gorman presided as first vicar ., ords placed In It under the' Airection - of Sioux Falls: Right Rev. John. Francis 4apostollo of Nebraska. .Bishop Scannell and Chancellor Monsignor Cunningham, blsnop of Conoordla; Right Waving his cap at the societies as they Colaneri. "With solemn' pomp and ceremony Rev. James J. Keane, bishop. of Cheyenne; passed, as he stood beside Archbishop Ire- the cornerstone was cemented In the north Right Rev. John Starlha, bishop of Lead, land of St. Paul. It was a proud moment W68t corner of the cathedral. It contains Right Rev. James Davis, bishop of Daven- fQr Right Rev. Richard Scannell when the ,th- f,i-,ln hUfnrt! record- Port; Right Rev. John P Carroll, bishop i c.ru B.n . . ... Ltllls, bishop of Leavenworth. These prelates represented 1MB0 Cath- olics In the west and northweBt, and re- viewed the great parade ' In Omaha of Omaha and South Omaha diocese Catholic societies from tno stana taai Hunaay. Manv of them now preside over Catholio dlvlslons which were formerly a part of the vlcarate of Nebraska, over which also chow how they worked and lived when our remotest ancestors were savages in the wilds of Europe and Asia. In some of the tombs I saw the massive Btone boxes In which the mummies of the dead kingH lay. I measured one which was ten feet long, six feet wide and eight feet high. It was hollowed out of a solid block of granite, and It weighs many tons. That mighty burial casket was cut out of the- quarries of Assouan, far above here, on the banks of the Nile. It must have been broyght down the river on a barge and carried to this place. When it was on the ground It had to be lowered down Into the vault, ajid that without modem machinery. As I went through the tombs I saw several such caskets, and the sr sheeloglst who guided me showed me the holes In the stone walls of the entrance ways where beams had been put across in order that ropes mltht be used to pre vent these Stone masses sliding too far when let down. It Is a difficult Job for us to handle Iron sates ot even four-feet cube.; One of these stone boxes would welsh as much as several such safes, and the old Egyptians carried them where they pleased. Indeed, I venture the civil engineers of ONJB OJ THE-COLOeSI Or t f , ' ; , .'.-' '.'.,''. "-' - . . ' - i ';.,.'- :' ;;v- r ..-' ' i s ; - ; - - '':;'.'.'.', , . t ' ' ' '' s ) YY.J THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER of Cornerstone of St. Cecilia's i '. VY n I E 1 BISHOP SCANNELL SETTING THB CORNERSTONB. great parade swung around from Fortieth ,reei io xne catrssnrai on ..run , .nc. . "Drum beat and heart beat" as the great procession passed by. It required, more than one hour for the line to pass the re- viewing stand, after which Bishop Scannell placed the cornerstone In- the cement wnicn win prouaDiy uom il ior an mo years to come, and no one has ever dared ,to predict whose hand will remove the double copper box, which contains the rec- the Pharaohs could teach our , poople much, v All about this region there rre enormous monuments wh(oh it would, pua sle the engineers of today to ban He. Talte the Colossi of Memnon, the two mighty stone figures In the Nile valley within a few miles of 'where I am now' writing. Each Is as high' as a slx-atory bouse, and the stone pedestals upon which they sit rise thirteen feet above the ground. I rode by them as I came borne from the alley of the kings, and climbed up ar.d ran the tape measure over . their leg. The legs measure nineteen fiet from sole to knee. The feet are each ten. feet Id length, so long that one would fill the box of a farm wagon from end to end, and ee wide that it could hardly.be fitted within it. The arms, from finger tips to nbow, each measure fifteen feet, and the middle finger of each bund la a yavd and a half long. . As I stood beside the pedestal, with my feet on Gingerbread's saddle, I could rot reach to the top, and 1 ilnd It difficult to give any comparative idea of . tha enormous weight of the structures. These two mighty figures' sit side by Ids on the edge ot the Nile valley. ' They MEJ4N0H, 13, 1007. v . - y v Y 7V FRINGES Q1T TUB CHURCH . 0n tha llslxth ,uy of Oitober, In. Uie . VMrf our lj0rd , ori(, thousand . nine hnn-' ijrd and seven, In the fifth year of the Vdlvl" id()re Roosevelt being president of the ' I'nited States of America; Oeorge J.awson 'Xi' mmyL ;COnietBtone t this rathidrL lo be built for the worship of God, under the Invoca- 0bCl?-nJfi$' bishop of Omaha.' The sermon was preached the Kings were erected in honor of an Egyptian .'king who lived thirty-five hundred edd years ago; and the temple, which he con structed behind them, has now entirely ! disappeared. They are right on the edge of the valley, with the desert mouatalna !in the rear. My way was through green 'fields, and ss I looked at them I thought I of how thy had watched the people sow. jing and reciplng for more than 8,600 years. ' Not far from these monuments are the ruins of tho temple of Rameses II, the Ifharoob who oppressed the Jsralltes and would not let thorn go. Among them I 'saw the remains of a statue of that old king, which show that they belccg to a ; structure at least sixty feej high. Thero is no granite nearer here than In the qunr. rles of Assouan, and this mighty statue must have been cut out there and brought down the Nile to Thebes, a distance of 13S mlhs. , ' Toting" the Obelisks. . Consider the obelisks whteh the Egyp tians made at those quarries and carried down the Nile to Thebes and also to Cairo and Alexandria. There are two obelisks still at this place. You may see them In the great temple at Karnak, Which is not XrAfPLH AT TFTfep, FHOW1NO OOEUSK COilMi-'MORA-ttLMi PUAJU.OU a YlC'iuiOU . S ; f" ' - IK V if' WATCH THE PASSING OF THB PARADE. bv the Most Reverend John Ireland, arch b'shno of St. Paul. The architect was Thomas Rogers Kimball and the con t minus William paxion Deverell, Albert Shall and Albert Foil. Besides this the records placed in the cornerstone of the great cathedral con sisted of three clippings from The Omaha Bee, one article published In 1SS2, a com plete history of the parish and church of St. Mary's; the second published In Tho Bee In 1W3 at the time of the silver Jubilee of St. Phllomena's cathedral, and tho third which appeared In The tee during the Inst week of September, 1U07, telling ot the effort and study made by Bishop Richard Scannell to round St. Cecilia's, ce of the fourth largest cathedrals of the tnlted States. Photographs of Pope Plus Tenth. Rt. Rev. Richard Scannell, bishop of Omaha. William Kelly, pastor of the ca thedral, and Father McGovcrn were sealed with the articles from Tho Bee and a copy ot The True Voice, In the copper box of the coiner stone,, which may bo sealed for all time for all that any person attending the ceremonies may know. About the cornerstone gathered priests and laymen, and on the platform, from which Archbishop Ireland delivered his masterful sermon, were representatives of every community of men and women In Omaha. Priests who were present were as follows: . Rev. C. Mugnn, South Omaha. Rev. M. M. Bronseest. S. J . Omaha. Rev. P. A. McOovern, Omaha. Rev. J. W. Ptenson. Onuinn. Hev. John Fitspatrick, umaha. Hev. E. M. Gleeson, Omaha. Rev. J. C. Buckley, Omaha. Rev. P. C. Gunnon. Qmaha. Kev. P. A. Flanagan. Benson. Hev. D. V.. Morlarity, Benson. Rev. M. J. Barrett, Florence. Kev. J. V. YVahHce, Gretna. Rev. W. W. Kroupa, Spencer. . Key. I). P. Harrington, Omaha. Rev. P. J. Manning. Omaha. Rev. P. McDaid, Omaha. Hev. W P. VYhelan !. J.. Omaha. Rev, T. O'Cnllahan, Souvh Omaha. Rev. J. Burke. Emerson. Rev. William Feld, p. .1., Omaha. Rev. J. J. Hennessy, Manlcy. Rev. M. A. O Boyle, Colon. Rev. T. Driscoll, Blair. Rev. W. J. Iee, Beaumont, Tex- ' n Rev. Bernard Slnno, Omaha. Rev. J. B.'Frlgge, Petersburg.- Rev. Abeud, Omaha. Rev. John Dallal. Syria. Rev. Henry Behoof, Monterey. Rey. B F. ;.Glv!n- Spalding. . . . . -. Rev. A. R. . Wise, 8. J.. Omaha. . Rev. Geerge A gins, Lincoln. Rev. S. L. Dowd, South Omaha. Revr James Chundeiak, South Omaha. Rev. Ferdinand Schuuettgen, Howells. Rev. J. M. Walsh, Council Bluffs. Rev. W. M. Mulligan, South Omaha. Rev. Michael O'Donaghmue, Bancroft. Rev. John Vranek, Omaha. Rev. J. B. Hummert, Earling, la. Rev. T. J. Mullen, Missouri Valley, la. Rev. J. Bros, Dodge. of Pharaoh's Time more than a twenty-minute walk from Luxor. They weigh something like 400 tons each, and it would take 1,600 horses to haul them, if they were broken up and loaded upon wagons. Each is one solid block ot granite, and each was carried In that shspe to this place. There are in scriptions on the Der al Baharl temple which show that these two obelisks were dug out of tho quarries, covered with hieroglyphic carvings, brought bore and put up all in the space ot seven montha, I doubt wtiether our engineers could do the job as quick or as well. 'We thought it a wonderful work to bring the Alexandria obelisk from Egypt to New York. It was carried there in the hold of a steamer, and to load it the bow of tho vessel had to be cut and the obelisk dragged In. The obelisk at Paris was car ried across the Mediterranean on a barge, and that which now stands In London was brought here in sn Iron watertight Cylinder, which wss carried to Alexandria In pieces and built around the obelisk as It lay upon the shore. When the great stone was thoroughly encased, the whole was rolled Into the sea and thus sewed to London. After landing, the modern en gineers had great trouble to get tha obllaks where tht y wanted them. That ot New York was rolled along upon iron balls whch ran In Iron grooves, laid down for the purpose, and that ot London was slid over greased ways to the place where it now stands on the banks of the Thames. Unearthing- the Oldest of Temples. Tha'oldest temple of Egypt by 1,000 years is now being unearthed here by the agents of the Egyptian exploration fund. This lies near the famous temple of Der al Baharl, and In a branch valley from where the tomb of the kings sre. When I visited it the excavators were at work, and the men in charge told me they had great hopes of making valuable discoveries. It was with James Teackle Dennis, the Amer ican representative of the excavation fund, that I went over the temple,. I met him at the littfe one-story house which forms the laboratory and home ot the foreign ex plorers, and had a chat with the other menibeu as to the progress of the work. The fund Is now supporting here a number of specialists from Canada. England and the United ElaUs, who are superintending the Egyptian laborers. They have quits an army of men at work and bave been successful. Of what they find one-half goes to the museum at Cairo and the balujice to the countries which subscribe to the fund, in proportion to the amount of their subscriptions. The chief money from Amerl. i has come from Boston, New Tork, Bsltimore and Washington, and our share of what is now being unearthed will go to the museums of those cities. Last year the only ' subscriber from Baltimore was Mr. Dennis, and his subscription was $100. Ths finds were so many, however, that he was sbie to send to Johns Hopkins museum articles which at auction would bave brought at least tl.560. Mr. Dennis tells me that the present out look fur the work of the fund la exceed ingly hopeful. He expects that another greit stone cow, like that which has been discovered, and Is cow la tb Cairo to use wa Cathedral j4 . ' ' i ; " l . . i t ,'r Rev. J. J. Curran8. J., Omaha. Rev. M. K. Norton, Webster City, la. Rev. IT. L. Zak, Howells. The ceremony of blessing and laylrg tha corner stone of the great catliedrsl was preformed by tt. Rev. Richard Sc.nncll, bishop of Omaha, who sixteen years ago was transferred from the dloceso ot Con cordia to presldo over tho dloceso of Omaha. The ceremony was nn Impressive one. Tho bishop, Accompanied by the deacon and suhdeacon. cross bearer and. acolytes, first knelt lie fore ft cvoss erected over the place where "the main altar of the cathedral Will be placed, then passed to tho northwest coiner of the cathedral where the corner stone had been placed In waiting. After blesalng It, tho solemn procession passed around the walls, bless ing tha foundation, and concluded by re turning to the corner stonu and placing it in post ion The ceremonies of lust week will go down In the hlBtory ot the Catholio church and tho growing diocese of Omaha, which : Is now promised nn archdiocese, as soon as the archbishops of the l.'nlted State agree upon tho establishment of see cities, which Rome Is expecting before tho ex pansion Is made, which will make Omaha w the sent of an archbishop. It Is expected that tho Catholic census of the dloccBa which is now being preparod by Mon signor Colaneri. chancellor to the bishop, will show lncreuses In membertihlp over the diocese of Nebraska, and hiaUlrv growth In oyery department. Of tho 1J churches In the dloeefe, the cities of Omaha, and South Omalm, claim evi teen, While practically all tho larger in stitutions of the church ore located In Omaha, Including frelchton university. Catholic Instltu"'- ' m Omaha. a given by the census of 1(K)7 are tho Con vent of the Lady til' Mercy; 61. Joseph's Hospital; Academy of St. Catherine; Monastery of St. Clare; Convent of Ht. Rose; Convent and Academy of the Sacred Heart; St. Berctmian's academy; Ml. BU Mary's Seminary for Young Ladles; House of the Good Shepard; St James Orphan age, besides a large number of parinb, -schools. In the diocese of which St: Cecilia's cathedral will be the church home, there are 63,175 members of the church, making it larger than any in the west, except two, which give an approlTPte of 70 eon rimJ bers each. Some 14,075 famlles are rearing; children In the faith of tho Catholio church, the record showing that mora than 8,000 were baptised during the past year. For the children of the diocese, tha church maintains seventy-one schools, and, the attendance Is more than 8,000. will be unearthed, as such things are usu ally found In couples. He expects much from the soil under the temple, to which I have already referred, and says that the people of 6,000 years ago usually stored their relics in such places far below ground. There was a pyramid In the center of ths temple, and itUs believed that there Is a tomb below this in which may be pictures, articles and Implements of times far back ot any yet represented. We may have tha actual paintings of the customs of 4,7is) years ago, drawings of the mon at work and pictures of the Implements used by them. If this Is so, America will have her share of all things discovered. , la tha Footsteps of Pharaoh. I have always thought of the Pharaoh who oppressed the Israelites and forced them to make brlckr. without straw as liv ing at "Memphis, r.f ar where Cairo now stands. The .truth j, he had a great city there, but bis cspitol snd favorite home was about 450 rdles farther up the Nil valley, at the v-jry spot where I now ant. It was known is Thebes, and it was one of tha greatest cities of antiquity, it sovered almost as much ground ss Paris, and it is said to have had mete than a, million people. The city had walls so thick that chariots drawn by a half dosen horses abreast could easily pass as they 'galloped along them. It had 100 gates and Hs temples and private houses were th wonder of the world. Borne of the resi dences were five stories high, the shy scrapers of those days. Thebes was .-.iitud for Its wealth, and its riches were a!4e4 to by the successful wars which the kings waged with other nations. The mi: r. an. lis of that day had mighty armies cf both Infantry and cavalry. Borne ot tha kings had as many as 20,000 war chariots, and ancient writers say that there Wfete pat tered along the Nile from here to 1 li?u.j..is 100 stone stables, each . large eno.-gh i accommodate 200 war horses. ' How P ha roan, Loocked. It brings one close to the days of the scriptures when one can put Ms lirnia on the very same things that wero touched by old Pha-aoh; when one can van the temples In which he worshiped; can sit on the statues erected In his honor, and can look at the tomb In which his royal bons were laid sway. One feels closer SM1I whn he can look at the mummy Itself and actually see the, hard-hearted old heuthco almost as he was when alive. I have gone thrpugn ll these experiences. I saw here today the temple In which tl: king's mummy was found, aiui 1 have inuila notes of old Pharaoh lyiusdf as ho lay be fore mo in his casket in ti.u muueurn at Cairo. The oppressor of the Herrews was a good-looking si an. His mummified fae shows a broad forehead, a ttrong Roman nose, a long chin and a firm, iron Jaw, He had big ears set close to the head, lux uriant brown hair and an Aduns arile . which rose and tell as he swallowed, b -m, of his teeth, notwithstanding tho'r lltX-) oii I years, are still sound, and they khow plainly out of a pair of thlu lips. He was a tall man, as can be Judged from Lis mummy, and the records show he had kingly air. Continued ea rags rive,) It